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{"result": "There are no entities that match the specified entity types (organization, person, geo, event) in the provided text. Additionally, there are no claims related to baggage measurements, weight limits, and restrictions from airline documentation that can be extracted.\n\n<|COMPLETE|>", "input": "\n-Target activity-\nYou are an intelligent assistant that helps a human analyst to analyze claims against certain entities presented in a text document.\n\n-Goal-\nGiven a text document that is potentially relevant to this activity, an entity specification, and a claim description, extract all entities that match the entity specification and all claims against those entities.\n\n-Steps-\n1. Extract all named entities that match the predefined entity specification. Entity specification can either be a list of entity names or a list of entity types.\n2. For each entity identified in step 1, extract all claims associated with the entity. Claims need to match the specified claim description, and the entity should be the subject of the claim.\nFor each claim, extract the following information:\n- Subject: name of the entity that is subject of the claim, capitalized. The subject entity is one that committed the action described in the claim. Subject needs to be one of the named entities identified in step 1.\n- Object: name of the entity that is object of the claim, capitalized. The object entity is one that either reports/handles or is affected by the action described in the claim. If object entity is unknown, use **NONE**.\n- Claim Type: overall category of the claim, capitalized. Name it in a way that can be repeated across multiple text inputs, so that similar claims share the same claim type\n- Claim Status: **TRUE**, **FALSE**, or **SUSPECTED**. TRUE means the claim is confirmed, FALSE means the claim is found to be False, SUSPECTED means the claim is not verified.\n- Claim Description: Detailed description explaining the reasoning behind the claim, together with all the related evidence and references.\n- Claim Date: Period (start_date, end_date) when the claim was made. Both start_date and end_date should be in ISO-8601 format. If the claim was made on a single date rather than a date range, set the same date for both start_date and end_date. If date is unknown, return **NONE**.\n- Claim Source Text: List of **all** quotes from the original text that are relevant to the claim.\n\nFormat each claim as (<subject_entity><|><object_entity><|><claim_type><|><claim_status><|><claim_start_date><|><claim_end_date><|><claim_description><|><claim_source>)\n\n3. Return output in English as a single list of all the claims identified in steps 1 and 2. Use **##** as the list delimiter.\n\n4. When finished, output <|COMPLETE|>\n\n-Examples-\nExample 1:\nEntity specification: organization\nClaim description: red flags associated with an entity\nText: According to an article on 2022/01/10, Company A was fined for bid rigging while participating in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B. The company is owned by Person C who was suspected of engaging in corruption activities in 2015.\nOutput:\n\n(COMPANY A<|>GOVERNMENT AGENCY B<|>ANTI-COMPETITIVE PRACTICES<|>TRUE<|>2022-01-10T00:00:00<|>2022-01-10T00:00:00<|>Company A was found to engage in anti-competitive practices because it was fined for bid rigging in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B according to an article published on 2022/01/10<|>According to an article published on 2022/01/10, Company A was fined for bid rigging while participating in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B.)\n<|COMPLETE|>\n\nExample 2:\nEntity specification: Company A, Person C\nClaim description: red flags associated with an entity\nText: According to an article on 2022/01/10, Company A was fined for bid rigging while participating in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B. The company is owned by Person C who was suspected of engaging in corruption activities in 2015.\nOutput:\n\n(COMPANY A<|>GOVERNMENT AGENCY B<|>ANTI-COMPETITIVE PRACTICES<|>TRUE<|>2022-01-10T00:00:00<|>2022-01-10T00:00:00<|>Company A was found to engage in anti-competitive practices because it was fined for bid rigging in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B according to an article published on 2022/01/10<|>According to an article published on 2022/01/10, Company A was fined for bid rigging while participating in multiple public tenders published by Government Agency B.)\n##\n(PERSON C<|>NONE<|>CORRUPTION<|>SUSPECTED<|>2015-01-01T00:00:00<|>2015-12-30T00:00:00<|>Person C was suspected of engaging in corruption activities in 2015<|>The company is owned by Person C who was suspected of engaging in corruption activities in 2015)\n<|COMPLETE|>\n\n-Real Data-\nUse the following input for your answer.\nEntity specification: ['organization', 'person', 'geo', 'event']\nClaim description: Extract baggage measurements, weight limits, and restrictions from airline documentation.\nText: obtain the appropriate permits in advance. The Ministry of Health is the body that has the authority to approve the entry of animals into Israel. It will also determine how the animal will be transported, be it in the passenger aircraft cabin, as baggage in the aircraft hold, or as registered cargo.\n\nThe main factor that influences the mode of transport is the animal’s weight:\n\nAnimals (Dogs, cats or exotic birds only) weighing up to 9 kg with their cage – They can usually be transported in the aircraft cabin.\nTransporting an animal (up to 9 kg) in the Business cabin is subject to the approval of the EL AL service center and the availability in Business cabin. The number of pets allowed in this cabin is limited and we recommend contacting the EL AL service center as early as possible to make the reservation.\nAnimals weighing between 9 kg and 100 kg with their cage – They can usually be transported in the aircraft hold.\nAnimals weighing more than 100 kg with their cage – They can usually be transported as registered cargo in the aircraft hold.\nIt is important to note that there are additional factors that may affect the animal’s mode of transport.\n\n \n\nPlease note: There are certain airports from which animals cannot be transported as registered cargo: Bangkok, Amsterdam, Boston, Mumbai, Brussels, Larnaca, Frankfurt, Moscow, Munich, Madrid, Berlin, Prague, Warsaw, Toronto, Vienna, Budapest, Kyiv, and Rome. \n\nHow to obtain authorization to transport an animal to Israel:\nContact the local authorities to obtain the required documents.\nAfter receiving the required documents and no later than two business days prior to the flight, email Veterinary Services at Ben Gurion Airport at [email protected] and include the following documents in a PDF file: certificate of good health, rabies antibody test, Appendices B and C (the last page of the file below). If you have met all of the conditions, the Veterinary Services flight permit will be sent to you by email.\nDid you send the documents to Veterinary Services and you did not receive a response within four hours?\nPlease call: +972-3-9792240\nUpdate us upon receiving the Veterinary Services permit. If the permit states that the animal will be transported with a bill of lading (cargo), please follow the guidelines for transporting pets as cargo. If the permit states that the animal will be transported as baggage, update the EL AL Service Center or the travel agent through which\nOutput:", "parameters": {"model": "gpt-4o-mini", "temperature": 0.0, "frequency_penalty": 0.0, "presence_penalty": 0.0, "top_p": 1.0, "max_tokens": 4000, "n": 1}, "history": null} |